M-Phazes heaps praise on Shark1:37

April 10, 2018. M-Phazes speaks to AAP in Sydney on Tuesday. M-Phazes, who has recently moved to LA, was attending the Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) Music Awards at the International Convention Centre and spoke about collaborating with fellow nominee Amy Shark. “It’s exciting to see such a talented, humble artist succeed. She’s just the best,” M-Phazes said of Shark. (AAP Video/Iain Boyd/Danielle McGrain)

If you’re gonna flip the bird, do it in the Top 10. Queenslander Amy Shark’s hit eff you anthem I Said Hi wasvindication to those who wrote her off. As a female songwriter over 30 fuelled by a decade of rejection, she’s kicking doors in a youth-obsessed industry.

Shark’s hustle paid off when Adore became her long-awaited breakout hit in 2016.

Despite copious material (epic, killer closer You Think I Think I Sound Like God is one she prepared years earlier), Shark HQ wisely took their time on her debut album.

They also roped in three A-list collaborators.

Like millions, Shark’s mind was blown by Lorde’s debut album — the influence was all over Shark’s Night Thinker EP.

Here Shark works with Lorde co-writer and producer Joel Little on Never Coming Back. And unsurprisingly it’s ultra-Lorde-y; brutal honesty over brutal beats yet plenty of space to breathe and decompress.

Jack Antonoff transports Shark into his ’80s soundtrack world with All Loved Up — it’s a Bleachers-style muted banger.

Mark Hoppus of Blink-182 duets on Psycho. As they open up to each other it builds to a classy crescendo — think later Blink rather than early Blink.

But Shark is fine going solo. I Got You is Feist meets Diplo, The Idiot morphs acoustic guitar with block rocking beats, Don’t Turn Around is catchy mellow radio-ready pop.

Shark’s power is intimate lyrics, littered with visual references that manage to be both personal and communal.

You’re dropped head first into heartbreak during Leave Us Alone, Mess Her Up is dark Shark throwing grenades. I’m a Liar a raw, reopened wound that heals before your ears.

And then there’s ballad The Slow Song, which relocates the love story of Adore from the bar to the bedroom. /CAMERON ADAMS

VERDICT: Shark tales

Try this if you like: Lorde, Bleachers

Easy Dazy by Fraser A. Gorman. Pic: suppliedSource:Supplied

Love Monster by Amy Shark. Pic: SonySource:Supplied

FRASER A. GORMAN

Easy Dazy (Caroline)

4 stars

Unhurried, unharried, Fraser A. Gorman is fine company for 10 songs on his second record. “You don’t need to wait for my love,” he sings, resting on his porch being patient until a distant belle comes to her senses. His lisp-flecked voice is in confidante mode on Walking to Oman’s, let’s-go-get-loose on Ask Marcelle and vertigo-won’t stop-me closer St Joe’s Street. Gorman sounds comfortable in his own skin, an Americana singer taking in the view from a Great Southern Land. /MIKEY CAHILL

Try this if you like: Marlon Williams, Icehouse

Mind Full - Leisure CentreSource:Supplied

LEISURE CENTRE

Mind Full (Hope St. Recordings)

3.5 stars

Melbourne’s funk scene is evolving rapidly, taking in the sort of R & B slow jams Rick James would recover to in 1988 after doing his best Caligula impression. That’s Leisure Centre’s MO, they ply future soul that deliberately tests listener expectations where some of the elder statesmen and women of the scene stick with saccharine soul. Hugh Rabinovici alternates lead vocals with Audrey Powne and Bec Rigby and they really sing the house down on Don’t Let Go and All I Long For. Sucka is solid, not quite super. /MIKEY CAHILL